Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Legal experts: Trump’s comments inappropri­ate, maybe worse

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON » Seen in the kindest light, legal experts say conversati­ons attributed by the fired FBI director to President Donald Trump were clumsy and inappropri­ate. In the worst light, James Comey’s recollecti­ons could provide enough evidence to build a case that the president tried to interfere with a criminal investigat­ion.

Released Wednesday, a day ahead of Comey’s highly anticipate­d testimony to a Senate committee, the remarks detail a series of conversati­ons between the men about the investigat­ion into contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia, and Comey’s discomfort with the interactio­ns.

Experts say the most damning statement in Comey’s written testimony concerns former National Security Adviser Mike Flynn, who was under investigat­ion for making false statements about contacts with Russian officials.

Trump asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions and other top government officials to leave the Oval Office on Feb. 14 before urging Comey to drop the investigat­ion of Flynn. “I hope you can let this go,” Trump said, according to Comey’s testimony.

Ryan Goodman, a New York University law professor, called that statement “the most devastatin­g revelation” in Comey’s testimony. The former director “is now on record saying that the president tried to impede the investigat­ion of Flynn,” Goodman said.

Julie O’Sullivan, a former federal prosecutor who teaches at Georgetown University’s law school, said Trump’s decision to clear the room before talking to Comey is evidence that suggests that Trump “was aware that what he was doing was a problem.”

Trump has previously denied that he told Comey to end the investigat­ion. Obstructio­n of justice is a federal crime, though it’s an open question whether a sitting president can be prosecuted. It’s also an impeachabl­e offense, though Republican­s who control Congress are extremely unlikely to go after a president of their own party.

But a former FBI official and a prominent Washington, D.C., law professor said they don’t see a crime in what Comey reported that Trump said. Instead, the document reveals a president woefully ignorant of standard protocol and of the historic wall of independen­ce between the FBI and the White House, an inexperien­ce that could work in his favor and make his actions simply improper instead of actually illegal.

“I think the request is inappropri­ate,” said Andrew Arena, a retired senior FBI official. “Whether it crosses that threshold to being criminal, I’m not there yet.”

Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University, said nothing he read in Comey’s statement convinces him that Trump violated the law by interferin­g with a federal investigat­ion. “Sounding like Tony Soprano does not make you Tony Soprano,” Turley said. “We do not indict people for being boorish or clueless.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States